Technical Overview of ISRO and NASA’s First Joint Mission: NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) Satellite
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.61359/11.2106-2458Keywords:
NISAR, ISRO, NASA, EARTH OBSERVATION, SYNTHETIC APERTURE RADAR, L-BAND, S-BAND, CLIMATE CHANGE, NATURAL HAZARD, ECOSYSTEM DISTURBANCES, ICE SHEET COLLAPSE, GLOBAL MEASUREMENTS, INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATIONAbstract
The NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) mission represents a groundbreaking collaboration aimed at comprehensively monitoring Earth's surface dynamics. Through the fusion of L-band and S-band radar frequencies, NISAR promises unprecedented precision in detecting subtle surface changes, ranging from ecosystem disruptions to ice sheet collapses and natural hazard occurrences. This paper explores the mission's objectives, technology, and significance in advancing our understanding of climate change impacts and hazard mitigation. The partnership between NASA and ISRO, culminating in the signing of agreements in 2014, underscores the international cooperation vital for addressing complex global challenges. With its targeted launch, NISAR heralds a new era in Earth observation, enabled by the fusion of cutting-edge technology and collaborative scientific endeavour.
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